Harry and Meghan: "We Are Taking a Leap of Faith"
The Duke of
Sussex has said he is "taking a leap of faith" in stepping back from
being a senior royal, saying "there really was no other option".
Speaking at
an event on Sunday evening, Prince Harry said he and Meghan had hoped to
continue serving the Queen, but without public funding.
"Unfortunately,
that wasn't possible," he said.
It was his
first speech since the couple said they wanted to stand down from being
full-time working royals.
The prince
said he had found "the love and happiness that I had hoped for all my
life" with Meghan, but he wanted to make it clear they were "not
walking away".
"The UK
is my home and a place that I love, that will never change," he said.
Prince Harry
said it was a sign of the pressures he was feeling that he would "step my
family back from all I have ever known" in search of "a more peaceful
life".
Earlier this
month, Prince Harry and Meghan said they intended "to step back as
'senior' members of the Royal Family and work to become financially
independent".
On
Saturday Buckingham Palace announced that from the spring they will
stop using their HRH titles and withdraw from royal duties, including official
military appointments.
On Monday
Prince Harry was pictured at the UK-Africa Investment Summit in London, where
he held a number of private meetings, including with Prime Minister Boris
Johnson.
Beginning
his speech at a fund-raising reception in central London for Sentebale,
the charity he co-founded which helps children living with HIV in southern
Africa, he said: "I can only imagine what you may have heard and perhaps
read over the past few weeks.
"So I
want you to hear the truth from me as much as I can share, not as a prince or a
duke but as Harry."
During his
address, the prince said he would always have "the utmost respect for my
grandmother, my commander in chief".
"Our
hope was to continue serving the Queen, the Commonwealth, and my military
associations, but without public funding. Unfortunately, that wasn't
possible," he said.
"I've
accepted this, knowing that it doesn't change who I am or how committed I
am."
Prince Harry
and Meghan have both spoken about the difficulties of royal life and media
attention, with the duke saying he feared his wife would fall victim to
"the same powerful forces" that led to his mother's death.
He told the
audience at the reception for Sentebale, which he founded to continue Princess
Diana's legacy in supporting those with HIV and Aids, that he felt they took
him "under your wing" after she died.
"You've
looked out for me for so long, but the media is a powerful force, and my hope
is one day our collective support for each other can be more powerful because
this is so much bigger than just us," he said.
As part of a
deal finalised on Saturday between the Queen, senior royals, and the couple,
Harry and Meghan agreed they will no longer formally represent the monarch.
However, the
statement by Buckingham Palace said they would continue to maintain their
private patronages and associations.
Prince Harry
said in his speech that he and Meghan "will continue to lead a life of
service".
"I will
continue to be the same man who holds his country dear and dedicates his life
to supporting the causes, charities and military communities that are so
important to me," he said.
Johnny
Hornby, chairman of Sentebale, said the new arrangements would not affect the
prince's work for the charity. "We don't need - from Sentebale's
perspective - his title, we just need his time and his passion," he told
the BBC.
There are
two big messages in this speech. The first is to deal with the "Meghan
myth" - the idea that the Duchess of Sussex is at the root of the couple's
desire to lead a different life.
Harry speaks
of "many months" of discussions over how to deal with the challenges
of "many years"; he's making it clear that he was unhappy with his
role long before Meghan entered his life
And he talks
about the decision that "I" made, a decision "I" did not
make lightly. He stresses that this was his call, though it was clearly one
that they came to together.
The second
message is that he wanted to continue in some sort of a royal role;
"unfortunately," he says "that wasn't possible."
Both sides -
the Sussexes and the Palace - thought at the beginning of negotiations that
such a half-in, half-out role might be possible. But the tension between a
royal life and an independent life was too great; the contradictions and
possible conflicts of interest were too many.
Harry may or
may not believe that to be true. But he wants to let people know that his
desire, at least, was to continue to serve.
Former
Liberal Democrat MP Norman Baker, who is the author of a critical book about
the Royal Family, said the public could end up paying for part of the Prince of
Wales' ongoing financial support for his son.
Mr Baker
told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that the Queen already offset support for
family members against the tax bill for the Duchy of Lancaster, the sovereign's
estate.
Much of
Prince Harry's funding comes from his father's estate, the Duchy of Cornwall.
Mr Baker
called for Prince Charles to say how he will support Harry and to publicly
guarantee there would be no loss to the taxpayer through a reduction in his tax
liability.
The former
MP also called for the Commons public accounts committee to investigate royal
finances.
Journalist
and royal author Robert Hardman said the agreement with the Queen meant the
duke and duchess's Sussex Royal brand, which they applied to trademark last
year, is not "sustainable".
"The whole
thrust of what has been agreed with the Queen is they won't be trading on their
royal credentials," he said.
In Prince
Harry's speech, posted on the couple's Instagram account, he said that when
he and Meghan were married "we were excited, we were hopeful, and we were
here to serve".
"For
those reasons, it brings me great sadness that it has come to this.
"The
decision that I have made for my wife and I to step back is not one I made
lightly," he said.
"It was
so many months of talks after so many years of challenges and I know I haven't
always got it right, but as far as this goes there really was no other
option."
The couple
said they plan to divide their time between the UK and Canada, after they spent
six weeks on Vancouver Island with their son Archie over Christmas.
The prince
told attendees it was a "privilege... to feel your excitement for our son
Archie, who saw snow for the first time the other day and thought it was bloody
brilliant!"
The duchess
is currently staying on Canada's west coast with her son, after briefly
returning to the UK earlier this month.
FROM .bbc.com/news/uk
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